THE ADVOCATE - 25 JULY 1995

CATHERINE DENEUVE - The ultimate lesbian icon breaks her silence.

Since THE HUNGER Catherine Deneuve has been a luscious addition to lesbian mythology. Now, for the first time, she reveals how she feels about all this attention and talks about her new gay love scenes in LES VOLEURS.

"People don't know very much about me. They do not know what really goes on in my private life," says 51-year-old French film sensation Catherine Deneuve as she sits in her pink Saint Laurent suit in one of the several suites she's taken over at the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles. "Most people still believe I am the person I have played on-screen --whatever person they have liked the most. I enjoy that." For many women, lesbians in particular, the career of the elegant and enigmatic Catherine Deneuve did not take off with Jacques Demy's 1964 French musical THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG. Nor did it begin with Roman Polanski's pathological 1965 REPULSION, nor with Luis Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR -- the shocking 1967 film Miramax is re-releasing this summer that Deneuve has come to America to celebrate. It didn't evenbegin with her 1980 award winning performance in Francois Truffaut's THE LAST METRO. None of these legendary films that so skilfully exploited the icy fire of Deneuve's inscrutable presence -nor any that came between or after- marked the beginning Instead that cataclysmic event, which has now become part of Lesbian lore, began when a luminous Deneuve, playing an aristocratic vampire in Tony Scott's 1983 film THE HUNGER, swooped down on an innocent and utterly bedazzled Susan Sarandon and foreight hot minutes devoured her with explicit sex and unprecedented, everlasting sensual enthusiasm. The she bit her, and the rest is history. "The lesbian vampire has a long and honourable past," says ALLURE magazine chief writer Lindsy Van Gelder, who authored one of the first articles on lesbian chic in1992--called, LIPSTICK LESBIANS -- for the LOS ANGELES TIMES MAGAZINE. "The idea of a beautiful, predatory, undead glamour-puss has been going on for some time, but it is surprising how many lesbians I've interviewed mention THE HUNGER and that actress!" That actress was born Catherine Dorleac on 22 October 1943 in Paris. The daughter of a veteran stage and screen actor and the younger sister of Francoise Dorleac-- a vivacious and popular actress killed in a car accident in 1967-- Deneuve took her mother's maiden name and made her screen debut at 13. After a series of small parts, the 16-year-old ingenue met French film director Roger Vadim, who became her mentor and lover. It is significant that Deneuve replaced Vadim's first wife, sex-kitten actress Brigette Bardot, in his life and on-screen, offering a new image to cinemagoers. For while Bardot's appeal was the promise of availability, Deneuve's most certainly is not. "Catherine is unattainable and represents everyone's existential dilemma--wanting what we can't have," say lesbian author and psychologist JoAnn Loulan. "There is this feeling,and not just among lesbians, that if we could attain something we can not have, then ourlives would be smooth and easy, we would be turned-on all the time, and then we couldeven have great sex with Catherine Deneuve." Indeed, Deneuve's remote femme-fatale persona has always served her well. In the 70's her frosty elegance brought her to the attention of Chanel, who had Richard Avedon photograph her draped over a bottle of perfume. That incredibly successful campaign eventually led to the launch of her own fragrance line, Deneuve. "I realize that I am better known for those advertisements in this country that I am as an actress," she muses. Au contraire. Liberated and independent in her private life, Deneuve has been married only once -- to British photographer David Bailey. That brief interlude notwithstanding, she has declared, "Marriage is obsolete and a trap." Instead, she bore children by both Vadim(son, Christian, 32) and Italian actor Marcello Mastroianni (daughter Chiara, 22) and refused to marry either one of them. Still, a liberated heterosexual lifestyle isn't necessarily a focus of fascination for lesbians. But perhaps the secrecy that veils Deneuve's private life combined with the fearlessly sensual lesbian love scene she did in THE HUNGER -- in which she was the seducer, the corrupter, and the powerful one -- does matter. "Ever since that movie, it has been very erotic and provocative for people to wonder about my feelings for women," she says simply. But for many, watching THE HUNGER caused more than wondering about Deneuve. Forsome, it caused some wondering about themselves. "I remember the first time I saw THE HUNGER," says Guinevere Turner, cowriter and star of GO FISH. "I was 16, straight, and over at my boyfriend's house. I had no idea a sex scene between two women was going to come on. I was so blown away. I remember thinking, That's so sexy! I hope someday I get to be gay so that I can do something like that." Comedian Suzanne Westenhoefer had a similar revelation. "I watched the whole movie with this platonic gay girlfriend of mine," she says. "We had known each other since we were 18 and had never been attracted to each other. After the love scene was over, we started looking at each other very seriously. We couldn't help ourselves because it was so incredibly erotic." Completely aware of the lesbian firestorm she set off 12 years ago with THE HUNGER, Deneuve is remarkably, though not unexpectedly, cool about the attention. Instead of being opposed to taking on another film role in which she makes love to a woman, La Deneuve has already done so. "I have just finish filming Andre' Techine's newest film, CHILD OF THE NIGHT (LES VOLEURS, THIEVES), in which I play a philosophy teacher having arelationship with my female student," she says without apprehension. Have you ever talked to the gay press before?Well, in Paris one time I did something for their ACT UP movement to raise money for AIDS. But I did not do an interview. This is the first time I have spoken with the gay press.For a beautiful actress to have the devotion of men -- gay or straight -- is nota new phenomenon. You have distinguished yourself by having not only themen but the women --gay and straight -- as well. Why do you think that is? I really don't know. I think that in some films I've done, I've kind of deceived some people --maybe gay or lesbian -- to feel much closer to me than to some other actresses. Of course,it is true that I have been involved in some films other actresses would not have done. Do you like women in general? Yes, I like women. I feel very close to women. I have been very supportive of women's issues. I signed the French abortion paper in 1972 and took a position about abortion at a very difficult time. I am very sad that once again abortion is becoming very suspect. I find that incredible. I think all these things have helped to make women have an image of me that is different from other actresses. Do you think that your role in BELLE DE JOUR -- where you are living a double life, being a whore during the day without your husband knowing -- resonates with some gays and lesbians who hide parts of their lives from the world?Yes, I can see that. People are very fascinated with that aspect of the film. They assume it is my way also. I am a very private person, so I think that sort of helps to maintain this image of me living a secret double life. In BELLE DE JOUR the brothel Madame, played by Genevieve Page, obviously has a thing for you. You actually grab her and try to kiss her at one point. Did this cause any lesbian interest in you when the film came out in 1967?No. That didn't start until after I did THE HUNGER. I think it was because the love scene between the women was so beautiful in THE HUNGER. I think Tony Scott, the director, made such a visually beautiful film, especially at that time, because it was a vampire story. I love vampire stories. That 's why I did the movie. Women especially were taken with that movie -- even more so when it came out on video. They always ask me to sign the cassette box of that video. Susan Saradon did an interview with THE ADVOCATE in 1991, and she said thepress kept asking if she had to get drunk to go to bed with you. She told them that was ridiculous. Why would anybody have to get drunk to sleep with Catherine Deneuve? [laughs] Susan Saradon did an interview with THE ADVOCATE in 1991, and she said the press kept asking if she had to get drunk to go to bed with you. She told them that was ridiculous. Why would anybody have to get drunk to sleep with Catherine Deneuve? [laughs] Oh, yes, I feel the same about her. The relationship I had with Susan Sarandon was very good. and I think something came out of it onto the screen. You can tell. There was something very natural between us. She is a very warm lady. It was a very long shoot, and neither of us was in our own countries, so we spent a lot of time together. Afterward, we saw each other and wrote to each other. We have a bond. I have a picture of her children in my home. She is always in my mind and heart. Also I think the scene we did was very sophisticated and good-looking. I think it was a very idealistic image of women together, a very good thing to have on film for homosexuality. It's interesting that lesbians watching THE HUNGER did not -- at least at the time -- grab on to Sarandon the way they did to you.I do not know why, but it is true. You didn't even play a lesbian. You played a vampire.Yes, but even at the time, when the film was first released, I could tell in interviews that the women did not see it that way. I could feel it in the questions. They were not thinking of me as a vampire. I had become a symbol for lesbians.Have you ever heard of the phrase lesbian chic?No. Oh, do you mean gay women who go with men as well? [Laughs] Well, no, but who knows? That would become chic, too. I'm sure every lesbian would give you a slightly different definition, but it refers to a trend that started in the '80's, when some lesbians consciously took back some of the things usually associated with straight women. Things like fashion, makeup, femininity in general.Oh, yes, now I know what you mean. Do you think you might have helped to create an early picture of lesbian chic in lesbian's minds because you are very beautiful and feminine and you did anerotic love scene with another woman?It is true that before THE HUNGER, the film image of a lesbian was always very masculine. She would have to dress like a man. If there was going to be a woman who liked a woman, then she had to look like a man. THE HUNGER had a very strong image of beautiful women,so perhaps it is true. Suddenly, there was a woman looking like a woman and liking women. Yes, I showed you can be beautiful and be a lesbian. Maybe I did that.When an actress plays the owner of a rubber plantation, the way you did in INDOCHINE, no one asks her if she really owns a rubber plantation. But when an actress plays a seduction scene with another woman, the way you did in THE HUNGER, everyone wants to know if she is a lesbian. Isn't that true! I think anything that has to do with sexuality makes people very interested. When you are working on the sexual side of a character, things become very complicated. When you have to touch and kiss someone in a film, it is not any longer something that belongs to the character. It belongs to you, because it is a continuation of your physical self, your desire. Some people fall in love with their costars and feel things that they never thought they would feel for them because they are touching. I may know an actor for years, and then we'll do a film together with a love scene, and I am astonished. It's not necessarily a sexual thing that happens to you, but it has to do with the fact that you touch and kiss and can be physically taken by someone-because we don't touch each other like that in real life,unless, of course, we really are lovers.So people questioned your sexuality after THE HUNGER?Yes, there were many questions. In the film, I just finished for Andre Techine, LES VOLEURS-he also directed WILD REEDS-I play a teacher who is in love with her pupil, a girl. I'm glad to hear this, because I was wondering whether you would ever dare to play another romantic role with a woman after THE HUNGER.Well, you are the first person I'm telling this to. And I do have concerns about talking about it beers if I say that I am doing this movie where I play a teacher, there are not many questions. If I say I will be playing a love scene with another woman where there is kissing and touching, then suddenly it isn't about the film. It is personal to me. It's not anymore the role but the actress. It is all about me touching another woman.(Laughs) Still, you're doing it again.(Laughs) Oh, yes! I do yet another roll with a woman, and the questions will come. Well, it is normal, really, sex being so important. It is still a big question mark about me. It is something people will talk about forever--and not just because of THE HUNGER. That's why I think BELLEDE JOUR is such an important film for me. You can look at it today and still find it relating tothe fantasies of women and men--but mostly women. You've said that you are concerned that women might have a problem with BELLE DE JOUR in the '90s because of the prostitution. Yes, because prostitution is something that happens to you because of troubles you had when you were young. In reality no woman would choose to do that just for pleasure.There's a split-second scene with your character as a child, and it seemed as if she as being molested. Is that true?Yes, that is why it is not a choice for her. All women who do extreme things like kill or have sexual obsessions or who are prostitutes have trouble with their fathers. Even if a woman is abused a very long time ago, it comes out in her life in a negative way. Some women get into relationships where they are physically hurt. Women are talking more about this because a long time ago they didn't dare.Do you think this private side you've maintained has helped to create interest in you from lesbians too?Oh, yes. And women know that I like women. I have very, very close women friends, and so people often say of me that I only like women. It is something that appeals to people. Me being an actress, not being married but having children, means I have this whole other side,this secret, private life. People still wonder. And the less I tell them, the more the wonder grows. People actually think you are gay? I mean, I know lesbians hope you are, but do they actually think you are?Oh, yes. If I go out with a man three times, they don't immediately say that he is my lover. But if they see me in a private situation or going on a holiday with a woman, they say, "Oh,yes, I think she is!"They ask you if you are a lesbian?No, they don't dare ask me that to my face. Never in France, because the press is different from the way the press is here. But sometimes I can feel it. But you have a very public heterosexual life.But I don't really let people see it.You say you are very close with women. Where do you draw the line? Have you had moments of knowing what it would be like to be in love with another women?The word LOVE means many things to me.Have you ever had a physical romance with a woman?I cannot imagine having a physical relationship with a woman. I have not done that. But I really love women. I have a very strong relationship with a woman that I have known for along time. I knew her for some time before I knew that she was a lesbian, but that never changed anything about my relationship with her. Do you know what the word closeted means?To close?Oh, that's interesting. Well, sort of. It's when people know they are gay, but they don't want other people to know...Oh, yes, yes. I understand, but in my opinion they should not be pushed. I know here in America you are very strong about publicly pushing women to openly say that they are gay, but I don't agree. I think that is wrong. I think it is very shocking.But the other side of this is that there is strength in numbers. People have no idea how many people in this world are gay.Yes, that's very true.If a woman is gay and she does wonderful work in the world, something thatother people would admire, she could be a role model for young gays and lesbians who are desperate for people to admire. The suicide rate among gay teens is high.I didn't know that. I thought it was much easier today to be open.It is, but still there are relatively few role models for young people.Yes, it is very hard. We are in a society that is ruled by men, and the image that people have of a woman is that she is married and has children. It is a problem for gays; I do know that. I have a lot--no, no, not a lot--but a few very good homosexual friends. I know one intellectual who told me he cannot tell people while his mother is still alive.That is very sad.Yes, but why should you force--No, not force...No, not force, but push someone to be officially recognized as being homosexual? I think to have a public life, you still have the right to have a private life. And some people have been talked about before they have decided they are ready themselves. They have been pushed before they are ready to ...to go out?Come out.Yes, come out. To me that is not right.If a friend of yours came to you--and she was a closeted romantic-lead film actress--and told you that she was considering coming out, how would you advise her?I would tell her that she would have to choose carefully whether to reveal something that is still, in our profession, difficult to be--without having a lot of trouble. You see, it is still a man's profession in France. Even if there are a lot women in films, there are few who are lesbians--that people know about.Yes, that's the point. No one knows about them if they don't come out.I think she would have to choose carefully because she would have to fight for it, for her career. If you are an actress and people know you are a lesbian, many people in the audience would not be able to forget-when they watch you-that you like women even though maybe you are kissing a man in the film. The filmmakers would say, "No, we cannot have her play the lover of this man. The public would not believe what they see." This is why it is good for the public not to know very much about your private life. You should be able to have a big range to be believed in many different roles. But we know other things about actors and actresses that don't stop us from believing them on-screen. If we see Clint Eastwood and Meryl Streep kissing, we don't say, "Oh, I can't watch that I know they are really in relationships with other people."But that is different, because people expect to see a man kissing a woman It is what people believe. If they know that an actor really only likes men, they will not believe him making love to a woman in a film.People believed you making love to a woman in THE HUNGER.Yes but they do not know that much about me. People don't think I am a vampire, but people don't know what goes on in my private life.So, what would you advise your friend? Not to come out?(Pauses) No, but I would tell her it is going to be a problem. Are you ready to fight for your career? You are going to have to be very open about it and very committed. You aregoing to have more troubles getting the parts you want than someone who is not gay, so you are going to have to fight a lot of people who are very conventional.You would support her in this fight?Yes, I would say, "I'm sure you can do it, but you are going to have to fight hard for it." There is a persistent rumour that you used a body double in the sex scenes with Susan Sarandon in THE HUNGER, is that true?There was a body double, yes. We both used body doubles. It is true. I confirm this.Really? Thousands of lesbians just read that and wept.Not the whole bed scene, no, but there were some images with body doubles.Have you ever witnessed any homophobia on the set of a film you worked on?(Pauses) What is homophobia?It's a fear of homosexuals that usually leads to some kind of discrimination against them.Yes, I've seen it. People do this sometimes without even knowing it, you now. There is an incredible, conventional attitude that people have about homosexuals to the point where you have to say something to someone. But then sometimes if you do, if you get into a discussion about this attitude, it makes it worse. People get more upset.So you don't say anything?What? Oh, no, they would never say this in front of me! But I've heard about it; people tell me things. But no, no one ever is...Homophobic...Yes, homophobic around me. Because to tell you the truth, I am not shy. I have a big mouth. I would not stand for someone to humiliate a homosexual man or woman in front of me, ever. It is something I cannot stand. I am a Libra, and I cannot stand anything that isunfair. I want to ask you something. Have you ever heard of the lesbian magazine Deneuve?Yes.Yes, of course you have! Well, I am suing them.You're suing Deneuve magazine?Yes, in France. They are trying to bring the magazine to France now, and it is not fair. They are using my name, and my name is a commodity. You cannot do that. Well, it's strange that you're telling me this, because I called the editor in chief ofDeneuve for background information on her magazine before this interview. And she told me that the magazine isn't named after you. She said it was named after her first girlfriend.Yes, yes, I know they say that. They say that it is some friend or lover of something, but that does not matter. Everyone thinks it is me. Didn't you?Yes, I did. In fact, I was shocked when she told me otherwise, I even asked her if she thought people buying Deneuve knew it wasn't named after Catherine Deneuve, and she said, "No one thinks Deneuve is named after Catherine Deneuve"That is ridiculous! No one thinks it is anybody but me. But this is going to be very tricky for you, because it will look like the big guy going after the little guy.Yes, I know, and it is a lesbian magazine, so lesbians will think I am suing them. It's not true. It does not matter what the product is--whether it is perfume or a magazine. My name is acommodity, and you cannot put it on something without my permission. It is not fair. I hope people will understand the real issue here.I hope so too. Many gay men and women have had loved ones lost to AIDS and breast cancer. You had a tragic loss early in your adult life you your sister was killed in a car accident. I realize this was a long time ago for you, and you've never talked about it. Still, a grieving process is a grieving process. How did you manage to deal with this loss?Yes, I don't talk of this, but I will tell you something: it was terrible. I was very young, and she died violently, so it was quite awful for me. Now, I have lost friends to AIDS, and I have been again living through those painful sensations. What is very different for me today is that there are other people to grieve with. There are so many friends who have also lost people to AIDS and, yes, cancer, that we can share this.When my sister was killed, I didn't have people to share my pain with, so I kept it inside. I was young, and I was working on a film and only had one or two days to mourn. But it was abad thing, being alone with this pain. Years later it caught up to me. It took over my life. It was a very difficult time for me. So I would like to say that even though this epidemic is a terrible thing, something good has come out of it. It has taught people how to grieve with each other. People are learning to share this long process. That is incredibly important. I wish I had known about sharing pain when I lost my sister. I am very, very grateful to know how to do this much better now.

THE LESBIAN NEWSJuly, 1997

When Belle De Jour made an unprecedented four million dollars in it's1995 American re-release - a large box office take for a foreign film,let alone one that was 27 years old - you can bet it was the sultry image of a young Catherine Deneuve on the poster that lured moviegoers into theaters. Considering that Deneuve hasn't make an American or English language film since Tony Scott's classic moody bisexual vampire flick "The Hunger" in 1983 and hasn't been a spokesperson for any products in the United States since her work for Chanel and her own perfume Deneuve, in the 1980's, it makes her present career at the age of 53 all the more startling. She remains an international icon. The marquee value of her name and her ability to draw in audiences hasn't been dimmed or devalued for a moment. She is truly one of the only ahandful of French actors, including Daniel Auteuil, Emmanuel Beart,Miou-Miou, and Gerard Depardieu whose films (though only a fraction ofthem) are exported to the U.S.

Deneuve's more than thirty-year career has as much to do with her acting talents as it does with her genetic good fortune. Although she still looks amazingly beautiful today, one only needs to look at any of her performances, especially her recent work for writer/director Andre Techine in Ma Saison Preferee and Thieves (Les Voleurs) and her performance in 1992's Indochine which garnered her an Oscar nomination for Best Actress, to know without a doubt that Deneuve deserves the boxoffice and fan base she still has. Unfortunately, her U.S. fans have rarely been able to see Deneuve's work in French comedies - they just never seem to get distributed here- and her non-French speaking fans often miss nuances of her performance while their attention is focused on reading subtitles.

Like many Americans, I first became aware of Deneuve through her seductive, sexy, and charismatic role of vampire Miriam Blaylock in The Hunger. I was lured to the film because of co-star David Bowie yet surprisingly found myself more wowed by Deneuve. I walked away a permanent fan, blown away by her sophistication, her accent, the way she carried off her ultra-chic 1940's inspired wardrobe, and fascinated by the cool sexuality she exhibited flirting with and eventually bedding Susan Sarandon's character of Sarah.

Sitting on the patio of her homey bungalow at the Sunset Marquis Hotel,Deneuve looked years younger and fresher than when I saw her in 1995.She acted downright jovial and her overall appearance was lighter and much less urbane, completely Marie-free, so to speak. Deneuve sat down with a fresh cappuccino and a pack of Capri cigarettes (she smoked twoduring our half-hour interview) and was dressed sophisticatedly hip in a black suit over a knit lavender shirt, her thick and tousled blond haircut just below her ears. The only trace of makeup was a light dab of pinkish color on her lips. She spoke freely about her work, career choices, and carefully thought out endorsements.

LM: You haven't done an American film since The Hunger, and before that you'd done Hustle in the 1970's. Do you not get offered American parts or are you just not interested?

CD: I'm not interested because the parts are not interesting. Also, Ihave the impression that actresses here complain a lot that it's hard tofind good parts for women in their forties, and if it's difficult for them, you can imagine what it would be like for me. I'm lucky peoplewrite scripts for me, but here it seems to be very difficult.

LM: So what do you look for in a role when you get a script?

CD: I'm looking more for the story, you know the script, than the part.It has to be something I feel is different for me, something original.

LM: What drew you to the part in Thieves?

CD: Andre Techine, to work with him again.

LM: Why do you think that you and Andre Techine have such a good working relationship?

CD: Because we are friends. Because we've been seeing each other now for fifteen years...we know each other.

LM: So did you even look at the script before you said yes?

CD: No, we (Deneuve and Auteuil) signed because we wanted to do the film together. We didn't have a script. First time I signed without having a script.

LM: So you had no idea what direction it was going to go in?

CD: No, when we decided we were to do another film together, the threeof us, we didn't know what it would be and there were two versions and that's how it came out.

LM: Did you feel any resistance to the fact that you were playing another bisexual character and also that your character was going to be involved with this much younger woman?

CD: I was a little worried because I had no experience. I was a little anxious, but the way that he wanted to do the scenes and the relation between them was a love relationship. It was like loving a younger male student--it would have been the same thing--there is no difference when you are in love.

LM: What's the general attitude in France towards gays? American's perceive the French to be very open-minded about homosexuality, but my gay friends who've visited say that they felt they had to be very closeted. Do you think that's true if you're gay in France or was that just their experience maybe.

CD: I think it's true in a way that it's not accepted, but here in the U.S. I think it's worse because it seems it's accepted because gays have a very powerful movement. But you can also feel from the people it's completely refused because some journalists told me but an American actress might not have considered the part because she would have to play a lesbian and she would take the chance to be turned on by the audience because of that. I think Americans are very conventional. The movements are very strong, very powerful, but in their boxes. If they come out of that, people reject them. You can feel that here. There is the gay and lesbian movement and all that, but I have the impression here that it only works if people stay in their community, but it's not accepted in a sort of more conventional community.

LM: So what are the attitudes towards gays and lesbians in France?

CD: I have the impression it's not accepted, but in a different way than in the U.S. It's not accepted but people can still mix much more together. French people are very individual--when they know a person as an individual, they will accept them more. But here I think they're no taccepted on any level--socially and mentally and most of all because of morality. Here sex is so important, and the refusal of sex is so prevalent.

LM: We're still very much a puritanical society and it's going to take thousands of years to get past it probably.

CD: It's difficult.

LM: How did the critics and audiences in France respond to your character in Thieves?

CD: Very well. I was very surprised. I received probably the most incredible letters ever from people for that film, and the reviews were absolutely wonderful.

LM: What were the letters, what did people write to you?

CD: They were so moved. They wrote to me because they were so moved by my character. I received letters from women but also from some men. Even by people in my profession, people I knew, but not well. I wasquite surprised.

LM: Do you think that people like you more now as that kind of natural character versus a glamorous image?

CD: Less dangerous, yes. I was never a dangerous woman because I like women and it's always been that women like me, but they like me more now today. And when I say less dangerous, what I mean is that I'm not the prissy blonde woman that could take your husband away, even if I don't intend to.

LM: You said in our interview last year that you've very protective of your image, and the you could have had much more commercial products.

CD: Oh yeah, I could have done much more, many things.

LM: How did that develop, realizing the power of your image and being so protective of it?

CD: Because I was lucky to do my first commercial with a very good photographer and for a very good product. I was Chanel #5 perfume with Richard Avedon, and that gave me a good start and a good view. Andafter you've done that, it was a big thing and it was successful, it it's a basic thing that helps you to make choices afterwards.

LM: Do you still get lots of offers to represent products?

CD: Yes.

LM: (I pull out a schedule for the New Beverly Cinema that shows adouble feature of The Hunger and The Addition. Deneuve pulls her chair up close to the table and puts on her glasses to get a better look at the flyer.)

CD: (Enthusiastically) Oh, ha, ha, ha!

LM: What attracted you to The Hunger when you were offered it?

CD: The package of the vampire story, I like vampire stories.

LM: It's constantly being show at revivals.

CD: And on videocassettes. It's unbelievable what I receive when I've been to special events where people ask you to sign photos. The amount of videocassettes I had to sign and pictures of the film, it's incredible. The fans are a certain type of people I must say, I could tell who was going to ask me to sign a videocassette of Hunger. Hunger is very special, even to very young people. Some people are completelycrazy about the film in a strange way, and not only because it's a story where I'm in love with a woman, it's not only that, it's because of the sort of weird, strange, heavy atmosphere and the very sophisticated lighting and sophisticated look of the film.

LM: So how could you tell who would want you to sign something from The Hunger?

CD: Black lipstick, red hair, boys with things in the ear, you know,sort of Halloween type.

LM: (Laughing) Well, that would tell you right away! (Deneuve laughs hard too.) I thought maybe you had very good psychic energy there.

CD: Well, they were very different from the other people who would come with their little bottles of perfume.

LM: The film is just as popular with straight audiences as with gay.

CD: Yes.

LM: Why do you think it crosses all those lines?

CD: Because there is something ideal in the film, on the physical appearance and the style of the film. Not so much today, but still lesbians and gays...they still have to fight I'm sure, even inside. Forthe person to be gay or lesbian it's not that simple, even if they seem to be more accepted, it's not that simple. And this film is sort of an ideal image because physically and visually the film looks so beautiful and so strong. It's a film they can relate to and it's the image they would like to show and it's a sort of very sophisticated, ideal image.I think that's the major thing. It's like a musical for someone or like a fairy tale for children. It's sort of over the top.

LM: Did you think when you did it that it would have this lasting effect?

CD: No, no, I didn't think that in videocassette that the film would become such a classic.

LM: What was David Bowie like to work with?

CD: Well, it was very difficult because most of the scenes we had together, he was in this very heavy makeup thing and it was like kissing a mummy and being involved with a mummy. But the scenes we had together were very few...I got much more involved with Susan.

LM: Did you feel like you had chemistry with her like you would havewith a male actor?

CD: Yes, yes, you feel that with women as well when you work. It's aquestion of affinity to a character of a person--in life it's the samething--I like women, but some women I feel immediately a normal affinity and attraction and some it just doesn't work--like with some men. Whenthey ask me, 'What do you like in a man?' I say, 'Well the same think I like in a woman.' A woman has to be intelligent, to have charm, to have a sense of humor, and to be kind. It's the same qualities I require from a man and woman.

LM: I saw you a few years ago in a store in SoHo, the Canal Jean Co. (a large warehouse store with inexpensive casual clothes and accessories).Is that a favorite store of yours?

CD: I didn't go this time I was in New York, but I like to go there,especially in the summer to get t-shirts for my children and casual things. Yeah, I like that store.

LM: Do you wear their stuff too?

CD: Oh yes, of course. In the country and also for the gym.

LM: Now every time I go to New York I always make a trip to SoHo to go to the Canal Jean Co. because you find great clothes and it's so cheap.

CD: Yeah (she laughs in agreement) it's cheap and you can pick up thething yourself because salespeople don't follow you around. I like that.

LM: I think people would be surprised by that when they think of you.CD: NO, there's a lot of French people who go there. It's very well known for casual and sporty things.

LM: SO the word gets passed on from French person to French person, isthat how you found the store?

CD: No, I discovered that a long time ago with my daughter (Chiara Mastroianni) and after that I realized how many French people go there.But no, no, I discovered by just walking on Broadway. Nobody told me about Canal Jean Co. I've been going there a long time.

LM: Yea, I've been going there since 1988.

CD: Oh yeah, probably me too. (We both laugh at our mutual interest and the years going to the store.)

LM: When you're in a place like that in America, what's the general reaction? I know when I saw you there, people left you alone. Ofcourse we all noticed you though.

CD: Some people come up and say, (she uses a reverential and astonished tone) 'Are you Catherine Deneuve?', or 'Are you who I think you are?' Isay, 'Well, I hope so' (laughs). But no more than that. They're just'Could I have your autograph?'

LM: So when you're not doing a movie what are you doing?

CD: Working.

LM: You're always working (laughs).

CD: No, when I'm not doing a movie it's not like a holiday. I have todo things--promotion, interviews, photos--so many things now, people I've been involved with, organization including ACT-UP, and others dedicated to AIDS, promoting amnesty, and film restoration, traveling and so many things. Seeing friends. I do take holidays but I am very busy.

LM: So, are you in a relationship now?

CD: Yes.

LM: How long have you been with him.

CD: Nobody knows about my love because I'm very protective about everything. I'm in a relationship but it's something very private and it's only been going on for a few months.

LM: You're regarded as such an icon, who do you regard as an icon? Whodo you look at and you're just amazed by?

CD: (Responds immediately) Marilyn Monroe. For a long time been intoher. Very good actress. Beautiful, kind and so much glow--you know, so much light in her face, her hair, her skin--and she was a wonderful actress. So very peculiar, very original.

LM: In 1995 they re-released Belle de Jour and then in 1996 they restored and released Umbrellas of Cherbourg.

CD: Yeah, yeah, it's like having your second career (gives a big laugh)and I think that next year they're going to re-release Young Girls of Rochefort because they're restoring the film now.

LM: So how do you feel now that they're coming out?

CD: I think it's quite strange but I'm glad because those are very peculiar and very French films and I'm glad that an American audience can now see them. They're very special to me.

Lydia Marcus is a film critic and freelance photojournalist covering entertainment online, in print, and on the radio.